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Hunters Moon
 
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Hunters Moon (Audio Cassette)

by Dana Stabenow (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)

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1 new from CDN$ 189.71 2 used from CDN$ 80.75

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

At Taiga Lodge, George Perry's exclusive big-game hunting camp 125 miles northeast of Anchorage, Alaska, the price of admission has a unique flavor. "The charges depend on the customer's attitude," George tells Kate Shugak, who's working as one of his assistant guides. "The more they piss me off, the higher the price." Which means the party of German computer executives that Kate and her colleagues are looking after will be lucky to go home with any money at all. More interested in firing off their expensive guns than in the sport of hunting moose, these guys are a danger to themselves and anyone else within range. But when human bodies start to outnumber moose-head trophies, the resourceful Aleut Indian Kate realizes that the deaths have more to do with financial and moral crimes back home in Germany than accidents in Alaska.

Hunter's Moon, Dana Stabenow's ninth installment in the excellent Kate Shugak series, is enriched with the intricate details of everyday Alaskan life. The author follows the lives of ordinary people as they try to survive the harshly majestic environment as best they can. She shows how people can be tempered and improved by the rugged country, or bent by it to the breaking point. Kate herself might occasionally acquire the mythic proportions of a fictional heroine, but she also embodies the pain and human frailty that make her instantly recognizable as one of us, no matter where we live. --Dick Adler --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

Come along on a hunting trip from hell in the harrowing ninth entry of Stabenow's (Killing Grounds) Edgar Award-winning series set in the Alaskan bush. It's autumn in the foothills of the Alaska Range, bear and moose season. Kate Shugak and four other bush residentsAincluding her lover, Jack MorganAhave signed on to guide big-game hunters. But the Alaskan guides respect the land and hunt primarily for meat, placing them at odds with their clients, who are usually more interested in bagging trophies to hang on their walls. George Perry, the pilot who runs Taiga Lodge ("taiga" is Athabascan for bear shit), doesn't like tourists any more than Kate does, but the money and the meat from the four weeks of hunting help them all survive the winter. Their latest party of hunters is worse than usualAa group of arrogant, rapacious German executives who blast Wagner on their boom box, expect everyone to wait on them and carry a mini-arsenal of expensive weapons. When one of them accidentally shoots his own personal assistant, Kate and the rest chalk it up to inexperience and tragic luck. Then another death occurs, and the guides begin to get suspicious; but they fail to recognize what these Germans are really hunting for until it's too late. Gripping and adrenaline-charged, punctuated with extreme violence, both natural and man-made, the plot gives its due to Ten Little Indians and "The Most Dangerous Game," but adds some surprising twistsAall delivered with Stabenow's razor-sharp suspense and gritty prose.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

39 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (8)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (39 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely the Best So Far, Jul 13 2004
Thanks to a number of reviewers who took it upon themselves to reveal the last 50 pages of this book in spoiler upon spoiler, I already knew that a great tragedy was to come upon Kate Shugak somewhere along in Hunter's Moon.

But even knowing that, I was totally unprepared for the grief that overtook me as a reader; the sobs that tore me apart. For those of us who have followed Kate from the very first book, this story is almost unbearable in its suspense, its heart-pounding intensity, and its gut-wrenching ending. It brings the series to a whole new level, and if I never read another one in the series, I will always remember this book.

The story starts out simply enough: Kate and her lover Jack Morgan, along with Kate's trusty half-wolf, half-husky Mutt, join feisty Old Sam and others as hired guides to a party of largely tenderfoot hunters. They've done work like this before, and they know all the pitfalls of such an escorted hunting trip, but this group of paid participants is more obnoxious than the average amateur: The entire group is from a multinational computer software company headquartered in Germany, and each of the teutonic wilderness wannabees is more obnoxious than the next. Before the first shot moose is cold, there has been an accidental shooting of a human being. And that's only the beginning. It becomes clear in very short order that a mass murderer has signed along for the trip, and that nobody is safe.

As Kate and Jack rely on their wits and their wildnerness savvy to figure out who is doing the killing, the reader is increasingly afraid for their very existence.

This is an amazingly powerful book. I'm glad I read it, but I'm still crying as I write this review. Whew!

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5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the series, Jun 22 2004
By Teresa A. McTigue "terrymct" (Silver Spring, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book, without question, is the best of the Kate Shugach series. It is, however, the one most likely to upset devotees. I was lucky enough to be in a small town in south central Alaska last year when Stabenow was appearing at a library fundraiser. Time and time again, she was asked why she did it (read the book to find out to what I'm referring, no spoilers here), why she wrote it that way. Stabenow answered that she didn't set out for it to happen, the plot just naturally flowed in that direction. She's absolutely right. It's what the series needed and served to advance the primary character.

This book is a solid mystery, set in an exceptionally interesting setting, and populated by characters that kept my attention. I highly recommend it.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Read it - you won't be disappointed!, Feb 7 2004
By Zann "Nana" (Tucson, AZ USA) - See all my reviews
I had read most of this series but didn't read this one because of the reviews. But last week while on a business trip I found myself out of reading material and picked up this book. I couldn't put it down and found myself in tears at the end. It isn't an English garden type mystery! It is however, full of characterization. Wonderful characterization! By the time the climax of the story takes place we find ourselves so happy for Jack and Kate. I personally have been rooting for them for the last several novels and now in this one they are finally going to be together. When you root for two fictional people and find yourself crying when something happens to them, it's a great story. Read it - you won't be disappointed.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the series
I was born in Alaska and lived there 23 years. I enjoy these books because it reminds me of home. Some are better than others. This book was great! Read more
Published on Jul 25 2003 by HopeP

1.0 out of 5 stars A Horrible Mistake
I've read all of the Kate Shugat books but may stop with this one. Some mystery writers have feel that to develop their stories, they must use the same character for everything... Read more
Published on Mar 15 2003 by R. P Pomeroy

1.0 out of 5 stars A sad slip-up for an excellent author
I have read all of Dana Stabenow's mysteries, and am a great fan of her writing. The characters are lively and complex, the setting superb, and usually the mystery itself is... Read more
Published on Oct 25 2002

3.0 out of 5 stars why kill off jack?
My wife and I have enjoyed the Kate Shugak series ever since we were introduced a couple of years ago. However, I found that this book left me uneasy and disappointed. Read more
Published on Mar 28 2002 by dogperson

3.0 out of 5 stars Action Without the Stereotypes
With "Hunter's Moon" Dana Stabenow has penned an action/adventure thiller without the usual weak cast of characters, thin plot and unreal resolutions. Read more
Published on Jan 7 2002

2.0 out of 5 stars Exciting but disappointing and, on some levels, shocking
Well, all the other reviews here have revealed that Jack is killed in the course of the book. Why don't they just reveal the identities of the killers, too? Read more
Published on Jun 11 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Glad I didn't read the reviews first!
I just read Hunter's Moon and I thought it was great! Yes, Jack dies, but I have faith that the author has plans for Kate. Read more
Published on May 30 2001 by mmwarren@ameritech.net

3.0 out of 5 stars Hunter's Moon
What is it with women mystery writers these last fews years? Have they collectively gone on a man-hating binge? Read more
Published on May 23 2001 by jandj14

1.0 out of 5 stars The Hunter's Moon
I wish I had never read this book with Kate's lover being killed. I liked his story line as much as hers and felt as if she had killed off one of the "stars" of the... Read more
Published on April 18 2001

2.0 out of 5 stars How can you review a book you haven't read?
I can't, not in all honesty - but I can tell you truly that although I've read all of her books leading up to this point, I won't read this one. Read more
Published on Mar 22 2001

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